Sunday, 13 December 2015

BSBI welcomes John Faulkner, our new President

As outgoing President Ian Denholm would no doubt agree, the
workload attached to this voluntary role can be pretty hefty so, before John’s inbox
starts filling up with weighty presidential matters, I asked him to offer us an
exclusive interview so we can all find out a bit more about our new President.

LM: John, congratulations on being voted in (unanimously!)
as BSBI's new President. You've been in post for a fortnight now and News &
Views readers will want to know - how does it feel to be at the helm of the
leading botanical society in Britain and Ireland?

JF: The President has a responsibility to help BSBI keep
moving forwards, and I feel very honoured and somewhat apprehensive to have
been asked to take on such a role. So far it has not been a heavy burden, but
perhaps this is the honeymoon period! If I have a concern, it would be that my
plans to produce a County Flora will suffer.

Your question does remind me of a similar one that used to
be asked in the 1970-80s: “how does it feel to be living in Northern Ireland?”
My stock answer, accompanied by a shoulder shrug, was that my cornflakes tasted
no different from anywhere else. In other words, daily life went on as usual,
despite the bombings and shootings you hear about from the media.

I think you’d
have been justifiably annoyed if I gave you that kind of answer, but in truth
the weight of office has not really landed on me yet.

LM: I'll try asking you that question again in a few months! Before you talk about your plans for the society, could
you tell us how you first got interested in botany - has it been a lifelong
passion?

JF: Funnily enough, I don’t really know the answer to that
one, but I recall one incident that led to me becoming interested in wildlife
generally. At the age of nine, I was walking with my family in the Peak
District, and my sister suddenly stopped me in my tracks to prevent me treading
on a caterpillar.

I picked it up and took it home, where an older girl who
lived next door identified it as a Northern Eggar. I tried to rear it to an
adult moth, but despite failing I was from then on bitten by the moth bug, and
naturally gravitated towards biology and other sciences at school.

LM: So you went on to study at...

JF: I was fortunate to get a place to study at Oxford. The first year was a common grounding for all biologists, but any inclination I might have had to study zoology waned when we were expected to experiment on the nervous system of pithed frogs.

John and botanists at the UmbraBSBI Summer Meeting 2015Image: L. Marsh

I considered doing Agricultural Science, partly because some of the best botanists in the University were in the Agriculture Department, but eventually settled for Botany, where my academic tutor was “Heff” Warburg of Clapham Tutin & Warburg fame, and a previous President of BSBI (1965-7).

LM: Was that when you first joined BSBI? How did that come about?

JF: After graduating, I stayed on at Oxford to do a DPhil.
To stay in Oxford was probably not the wisest decision in scientific career
terms, as I had planned to do it under Heff’s supervision, but he had died
within a week or two of my finals, and my first year was spent under a temporary supervisor who was not interested in my work.

Wildflowers are usually encouragedin John & Gillian's garden, but some(like this Dandelion) need a little restraint!Image courtesy J. Faulkner

Though I might not have admitted it at the
time, the real reason for staying was that my girlfriend was staying in Oxford
to do a Dip Ed. As things turned out, however, it was one of the best decisions
I have ever taken as we stayed together until she died some 37 years later.

The
DPhil was experimental taxonomic work on sedges. The original concept was hatched when Heff was alive, with advice from Clive Jermy. After a year or so, John Richards arrived in the department and took over my supervision, which was a stroke of luck as he brought a fresh outlook and good advice at a time it was needed. It was early on in my spell as a research student that I joined
BSBI.

LM: And then you went to work in Northern Ireland and
eventually rose there to become Director of Natural Heritage in the Department of the Environment?

JF: After Oxford, I went to work for the then Ministry of Agriculture for Northern Ireland as a grass breeder and also lectured in
Agricultural Genetics at The Queen’s University of Belfast. I was appointed to
be scientific assistant to the head of the grass breeding programme, but before
I took up the post he had moved on to a more senior post.

John examines a fern on the Isle of Lewis;Outer Hebrides Recording Week 2014Image: L. Marsh

He was not replaced,
so I was de facto head of the programme as soon as I started, which
necessitated a steep learning curve. The outcome was that I stayed for 16 years,
with a role that evolved to encompass amenity grasses and various other crops. Eventually,
I moved across Departments into a new post heading up the scientific side of
conservation.

LM: With so many responsibilities, were you able to get out
and do much field botany during this period?

JF: Only to a negligible extent within my official work!
During my time as a grass breeder, I was fortunate to live very close to my
office, lab and main trial grounds, so
there was some spare time for botany, subject to the demands of young children
and a large garden. Later, that spare time declined as I had a rather long
commute into Belfast every day.

LM: Did you have any chance to travel further afield or did you focus on your local
patch?

JF: I have not done much serious plant recording outside my
local VC and other counties in Ulster, but have always enjoyed dabbling with
the flora of wherever I happen to be.

My favourite area to visit is the
North-west of Scotland, especially the Outer Hebrides where I first went on a
family holiday in 1950, and have since returned at least 20 times.

At one time
or another, I have visited every continent apart from Antarctica. Several years
ago, I went on a wonderful organised trip to Yunnan in South-west China in
2007, where we were travelling in the footsteps of some of the renowned plant
hunters of earlier generations.

Most of my travelling, however, has been done
in circumstances where I had to take into account the interests of those I was
with, rather than focus exclusively on plants. My second wife, Gillian, is very
tolerant, but there are limits to how much I can expect her to put up with on
holiday.

LM: When did you become a Vice-County Recorder (VCR) and - the big question for any
VCR right now - how are you getting on with recording for Atlas 2020?

JF: I took on the VCR role in Co. Armagh (H37) in 1991.
Apart from my predecessor, Norah Dawson, I was the only other BSBI member
resident in the county. The demands of work at that time meant that I was able
to act in little more than a caretaker role at first. In any case, there were
parts of the county where you would have been be a little reluctant to go nosing around
in search of plants in case you were suspected of something far less innocent.

Since retiring in 2005, however, I have been able to record most of the county
quite thoroughly, mostly on my own, but also often in the company of Ian
McNeill, the Co. Tyrone recorder.

My chief remaining gaps are not geographical
but taxonomic, ie the genera for which my ID skills are inadequate, and there are probably more of those than I care to admit!

LM: In recent years you have also taken on the role of Chair
of the Committee for Ireland and you have been a driving force behind some very
successful meetings and conferences - botany really seems to be flourishing in Ireland!

Recording for Atlas 2020 is pressing ahead, though of course
there is still a great deal to do in many counties. Perhaps the most heartening
thing of all is that we are seeing a new generation of Irish botanists taking
part in our activities. No doubt Maria’s – and your – activities with social
media have played an important part here.

LM: Yes, it’s great to see so many young Irish botanists
interacting with Maria on Facebook and Twitter - I agree, she does an amazing
job! So, the big question: What are the main issues you'd like to focus on
during your presidency?

JF: It’s a fair question, but before I commit myself too
firmly, it will be important for me to hear what others have to say and not charge
in with too many preconceptions. So I
will be in listening mode for the next few months.

John at BinevenaghBSBI Summer Meeting 2015Image: L. Marsh

That said, it seems
inescapable that two issues will feature very prominently. One is Atlas 2020.
We must make sure that this is the best Atlas yet, building on the strengths of
its predecessors and so far as possible overcoming their weaknesses.

The other
is that most mundane of all issues – money. When I joined the Society in 1967,
all the officers were voluntary and members’ subscriptions covered nearly three
quarters of its official expenditure. That is a model we have left behind long
ago as it no longer works for a Society of our size and output. We depend on
our very dedicated team of staff, but need to be constantly seeking out funds
in order to maintain and strengthen our position.

The role of the President is not closely defined and we will
be making one significant change. My predecessor, Ian Denholm, chaired not only
the Council of BSBI but also its Board of Trustees, which is its top decision-taking body.

Although as President I shall be attending the Board
meetings, I will not be chairing them, and at the moment I don’t know who will, as the Board members will elect their chairperson at the next meeting.

This
will, I hope, place me in a stronger position to act as a channel of
communication and advice between the Board on the one hand and the Council and
all the other elements within BSBI on the other.

Ian has done a superb job of steering BSBI through its early
years under the new structure, and we all owe him a tremendous debt of
gratitude. My own experience has been
that he was a constant source of support during my spell chairing the Committee
for Ireland, and I am sure there will be many others who could make similar
observations. I am delighted that he is
staying on as a member of the Board.

LM: Thanks for answering all these questions, John. Can I invite
you to come back in a few months and give us an update? And one final question
for you: will our new President be taking part in this year’s New Year Plant Hunt?

JF: Yes, definitely. I am working with some local partners on
a project to raise awareness of the flora of the Ring of Gullion area in South
Armagh. One of our planned activities is a New Year Plant Hunt. It is an ideal
opportunity as the project – for reasons beyond our control – has to be
completed between September and March. Let’s hope the country isn’t blanketed
with snow!

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About Me

I'm the Communications Officer for the Botanical Society of Britain & Ireland. Since June 2012, I've been telling everyone how BSBI can help you understand more about wild plants. And how much fun it is hanging around with botanists!